Pten heterozygous (Pten+/-) mice develop increased papilloma numbers and show decreased carcinoma latency time in comparison with controls after skin treatment with dimethyl benzanthracene (DMBA) and tetradecanoyl-phorbol acetate (TPA). H-ras mutation is normally a hallmark of DMBA-TPA-induced skin tumors, but 70% of carcinomas from Pten+/- mice do not exhibit this mutation, and in all cases have lost the wild-type Pten allele. Tumors that retain the Pten wild-type allele also have H-ras mutations, indicating that activation of H-ras and complete loss of Pten are mutually exclusive events in skin carcinomas. Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) is consistently activated in the tumors with H-ras mutations, but is strongly down-regulated in Pten-/- tumors, suggesting that this pathway is dispensable for skin carcinoma formation. These data have important implications in designing individual therapeutic strategies for the treatment of cancer.
CITATION STYLE
Mao, J. H., To, M. D., Perez-Losada, J., Wu, D., Del Rosario, R., & Balmain, A. (2004). Mutually exclusive mutations of the Pten and ras pathways in skin tumor progression. Genes and Development, 18(15), 1800–1805. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.1213804
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.